Travel Matters

Sunday, October 15, 2017

Animal and Human Orphans Are Rescued from Despair

Although massive elephants appear to be robust and tough,
they are in fact the most fragile of all animals, according to Angela
Sheldrick, the dynamic director of the Elephant Orphanage in Nairobi, a sanctuary of hope, part of the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, set up in memory of her legendary father.

So when a baby elephant is left alone and stranded in the
wilderness when its mother dies from poaching or drought, the helpless infant
is desperately vulnerable and terrified. This is a heartbreaking tragedy.

Elephants are just like humans. They have a long life span
of 80 or more years and a long childhood of dependency. Babies in the wild
suckle from their patient mothers for years and orphans are bottle-fed for up
to five years, every three hours around the clock, seven days a week by devoted
keepers who even sleep in the stockades to care for the babies through the
night.

Orphan eli’s are not ready for release to join the wild
herds at Tsavo for 10 years. The orphanage is rescuing one new stranded baby every
week because of the devastating drought. That’s a lot of baby elephants to care
for over the next decade. People who love elephants can foster an elephant baby
on the Trust’s website.

Visitors from around the world to the famous orphanage watch in sheer delight as the adorable babies drink their bottles of milk and
then frolic gleefully, slipping and sliding, splashing and thrashing, in the
rust-red mud. Angela says wallowing in mud is the equivalent pleasure to humans
enjoying a pampering spa!

Meeting Pili

I was lucky to meet the tiniest elephant I’ve every seen,
three-week old Pili. His name means ‘pepper’ in Swahili because he was rescued
clinging to a pepper tree after falling in the river in the Maasai Mara. Quivering
and shy, Pili now sticks close to the larger female baby eli’s, who encircle
him protectively. Elephants are so nurturing they will adopt babies from
outside their herd and even other species of animals.

Big Cats

At another Animal Orphanage inside the Nairobi National Park,
the rescued babies are mostly big cats. These majestic apex predators are sadly
reduced to lazing away their days in enclosures and being handfed chunks of
meat, instead of hunting. Rescued as babies, they have been raised in captivity
and would be incapable of fending for themselves in the wild.

I discover that lions, unlike elephants, do not care for
orphans outside their family group so the ferocious lion and lioness must be
kept away from the lonely little cub in separate enclosures or they would kill
him.

Seeing these magnificent, powerful animals behind wire mesh,
instead of roaming the plains, tugs at my heart but I realise it’s a better alternative
than them dying. Most of the big cats have been victims of the drought caused
by climate change, which is caused by human pollution. Tragically, the
disruption to nature usually leads back to us humans.

Cheating death

The elegant cheetah with its distinctive streaks under the
eyes, is the fastest of all the big cats with their long, greyhound-like legs.

I remember seeing a family of cheetahs relaxing in the shade
of a tree on the Maasai Mara last year, looking so proud with disdainful
superiority in their ability to reprimand any foolish human with one swipe of a
powerful paw.

However baby ‘Derick Duma’ was a sick three-week old cub
from Wajir when taken into the orphanage in 2014. The keepers say he cried
through months of painful injections, but seemed to know they were helping him
to recover. Derek became one of the friendliest cheetahs and loves his animal
toys.

Leopards are beautiful with their profusion of spots. Little
Talek joined the orphanage in 2006 as a two-week-old cub after being found all
alone and crying pitifully near the Maasai Mara. He was hand reared, drinking
milk from a bottle, and soon started eating steak mince. Now he is a beautiful, fully-grown leopard affectionate with the keeper who has cared for him since a baby.

Humans Babies without
Parents

Sandy McDonald, an eloquent, compassionate woman, living in
Melbourne Australia, originally from Zimbabwe, read my stories and contacted me
about her own phenomenal charity work in Kenya. Such is the ease of
connectivity through social media and the wonders of the worldwide web.

If your heart breaks for animal orphans, the suffering
of Africa’s human orphans is beyond comprehension.

Sandy’s research revealed the unimaginable tragedy of one
child losing a parent every 22 seconds to HIV-AIDS and the staggering figure of
40 million babies and children abandoned and orphaned across the continent of
Africa.

Sandy started the charity, Knit-A-Square with the creative
idea of recruiting knitters from around the world to knit squares to sew
together to make comforting blankets for orphans.

Sandy explains: "I came up with the idea and started the website and the community, but the squares went to my Aunt, Ronda Lowrie in South Africa, who agreed to the idea. She was deluged with parcels of hand knitted squares made with tears and love! Aunt Ronda organised the sorting and stitching of over one million squares and items, and the distribution of the blankets to the children over the last nine years.

"At over 72 now, that is no mean feat. She is still working tirelessly to do this work supported by the worldwide community."

Sandy launched CreateCare
GLOBAL and now supports the Kenyan orphanage, Rafiki Mwema, which cares for and
rehabilitates damaged children, who have been the victims of sexual abuse.

Watch Sandy’s enthralling TED
Talk and be touched by her passion and astonishing work that has taken off
from a humble idea of providing comfort to homeless, parentless desperate
children.

For animal and human babies who suffer cruelty, it restores faith in humanity to know that nurturing, protective love is a powerful healing force.

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About Me

Hello Friends,
Rather than focusing on what the world can do for you, consider what you can do for the world!
Our planet is in crisis and needs us all to solve problems and improve the quality of life.
Everyone, whatever age, can use their wisdom, compassion and skills to improve life for humans, animals and the planet.
I challenge you to embrace a life of love and purpose.
I am an experienced journalist with a long career writing for newspapers, magazines and online publications in Australia and the UK. I'm also a qualified counsellor and workshop facilitator.
These days, I'm passionate about empowering communities with knowledge about health, human rights and ending harmful practices across Africa.
Share my journey and be inspired to Make A Difference!